Article

Microclimate variability and long-term persistence of fragmented woodland

Details

Citation

Davies A, Smith MA, Froyd CA & McCulloch R (2017) Microclimate variability and long-term persistence of fragmented woodland. Biological Conservation, 213 (Part A), pp. 95-105. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2017.06.006

Abstract
Favourable microclimates are predicted to buffer fragmented populations against the effects of environmental change, but ecological timeseries are often too short to establish the extent to which such microsites facilitate population persistence through multiple climate shifts. We investigate the effects of microclimatic heterogeneity on woodland resilience through millennial climate and disturbance shifts near northwest European woodland range limits. We use palaeoecological data from northern Scotland to study the effects of fragmentation on community composition and diversity in a potentially favourable microclimate, and compare palynological timeseries of tree abundance from five sites to assess the effects of favourable (low-lying sheltered) versus more marginal (higher altitude) settings on population persistence and stability. The sheltered site shows persistence of tree cover through Holocene climatic and anthropogenic shifts, including climatically-driven regional woodland contraction around 4400calBP (calendar years before present), when surviving woods became compositionally differentiated into upland pine and low-lying deciduous communities. A favourable microclimate can thus buffer woodlands against environmental shifts and increase continuity of canopy cover, but it does not generate stable communities. Compositional reorganisation is an essential stress response mechanism and should be accommodated by conservation managers. The replacement of deciduous taxa byPinus sylvestrisafter 1060calBP represents the decoupling of pine distribution from climate drivers by management intervention. As a result, current microrefugial woodland composition reflects late Holocene human intervention. Alternative models of community composition and behaviour from palaeoecology provide a stronger foundation for managing microsite communities than relict woods in contrasting environmental settings.

Keywords
Paleoecology; Climate change; Conservation; Woodland; Fragmentation; Scotland

Journal
Biological Conservation: Volume 213, Issue Part A

StatusPublished
Publication date30/09/2017
Publication date online11/07/2017
Date accepted by journal06/06/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/25691
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0006-3207